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出境医 / 临床实验 / Danish Cardiovascular Screening Trial II (DANCAVAS-II)

Danish Cardiovascular Screening Trial II (DANCAVAS-II)

Study Description
Brief Summary:
This study attempts to reduce social inequality in cardiovascular health by performing an interventional screening trial on how best to decrease cardiovascular disease (CVD) among people with low social status.

Condition or disease Intervention/treatment Phase
Cardiac Disease Vascular Diseases Diagnostic Test: Invitation to screening Not Applicable

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Study Design
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Study Type : Interventional  (Clinical Trial)
Estimated Enrollment : 20000 participants
Allocation: Randomized
Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description: Randomised
Masking: None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose: Screening
Official Title: Danish Cardiovascular Screening Trial II
Actual Study Start Date : August 1, 2017
Estimated Primary Completion Date : August 1, 2020
Estimated Study Completion Date : August 1, 2027
Arms and Interventions
Arm Intervention/treatment
Active Comparator: Screening
Invitation to cardiovascular screening
Diagnostic Test: Invitation to screening
Invitation to CVD screening with non contrast CT scanning, ABI measurement and blood tests

Placebo Comparator: Control
No invitation to cardiovascular screening
Diagnostic Test: Invitation to screening
Invitation to CVD screening with non contrast CT scanning, ABI measurement and blood tests

Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures :
  1. Overall mortality [ Time Frame: 5 years ]
    Deaths of any cause


Eligibility Criteria
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Ages Eligible for Study:   60 Years to 64 Years   (Adult)
Sexes Eligible for Study:   Male
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:   No
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Men aged 60-64 living in the municipalities of Funen, Silkeborg, Vejle and surrounding municipailties

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Men not aged 60-64
  • Men not living in the mentioned municipalities
  • Women
Contacts and Locations

Contacts
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Contact: Jes S Lindholt, PhD +45 24641214 jes.sanddal.lindholt@rsyd.dk

Locations
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Denmark
Odense University Hospital Recruiting
Odense, Denmark, 5000
Contact: Axel C Diederischsen, PhD         
Principal Investigator: Axel Diederichsen, PhD         
Region Hospital Silkeborg Recruiting
Silkeborg, Denmark, 8600
Contact: Lars Frost, PhD         
Principal Investigator: Lars Frost, PhD         
Svendborg Sygehus Recruiting
Svendborg, Denmark, 5700
Contact: Jess Lambrectsen, PhD         
Principal Investigator: Jess Lambrechtsen, PhD         
Vejle Sygehus Recruiting
Vejle, Denmark, 7100
Contact: Martin Busk, PhD         
Principal Investigator: Martin Busk, PhD         
Sponsors and Collaborators
Odense University Hospital
University of Aarhus
Investigators
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Principal Investigator: Jes S Lindholt, PhD Odense University Hospital
Tracking Information
First Submitted Date  ICMJE February 27, 2018
First Posted Date  ICMJE May 10, 2019
Last Update Posted Date May 16, 2019
Actual Study Start Date  ICMJE August 1, 2017
Estimated Primary Completion Date August 1, 2020   (Final data collection date for primary outcome measure)
Current Primary Outcome Measures  ICMJE
 (submitted: May 9, 2019)
Overall mortality [ Time Frame: 5 years ]
Deaths of any cause
Original Primary Outcome Measures  ICMJE Same as current
Change History
Current Secondary Outcome Measures  ICMJE Not Provided
Original Secondary Outcome Measures  ICMJE Not Provided
Current Other Pre-specified Outcome Measures Not Provided
Original Other Pre-specified Outcome Measures Not Provided
 
Descriptive Information
Brief Title  ICMJE Danish Cardiovascular Screening Trial II
Official Title  ICMJE Danish Cardiovascular Screening Trial II
Brief Summary This study attempts to reduce social inequality in cardiovascular health by performing an interventional screening trial on how best to decrease cardiovascular disease (CVD) among people with low social status.
Detailed Description

Background

Although CVDs have decreased, they are still among the most predominant cause of morbidity and mortality in the western world, incl. Denmark, where about 420,000 people have recognized CVD symptoms. Due to an aging population, the decline has not reduced CVD admissions and healthcare costs. In Denmark, the CVD related hospital admission costs are DKK 4.6 billion and the pharmaceutical cost DKK 2.4 billion. The Danish National Board of Health has reported that CVD carries the second largest socioeconomic difference in burden of disease. Unfortunately, population-based health checks and screening for risk factors has proven not efficient. Consequently, screening of asymptomatic CVD is discussed intensively. In the investigators first unique CVD screening RCT (2008-11), the Viborg Vascular (VIVA) trial, more than 50.000 65-74 year old men were randomised for population-based ultrasound screening for abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA), peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and hypertension. In case of positive finding, preventive medical actions were initiated. A significant reduction in overall mortality by 7% after 5 years was observed. Using a non-contrast computered tomography (CT) scan, instead of the ultrasound based screening approach, has the opportunity to identify aneurysms in the entire aortic, coronary artery calcification (CAC) and arterial fibrillation, so individualized risk assessment and initiation of preventive actions on those with sign of early asymptomatic CVD is possible. A second trial - The Danish Cardiovascular Screening (DANCAVAS) trial initiated was initiated in 2014 randomizing 45.000 65-74 year old men with the potential of a huge beneficial effect on health, quality of life (QoL) and survival. However, screening is impaired by lower social class, and adherence to initiated prevention could be impacted as well. Consequently, we want to conduct a third RCT (Fighting Social Inequality in Cardiovascular Health (FISICH) to test a number of add-ons to screening that potentially balance the benefits across socio economic groups. The perspective is to establish a clear decision foundation for public health care policy incl. benefits, cost effectiveness and impact on social inequality of alternative variants of population screening for CVD.

Hypotheses

The primary hypothesis is that an extensive circulatory screening and intervention programme reduces social inequality in cardiovascular health and fulfills the WHO criteria for screening. However, this reduction can be even more pronounced, if factors reducing the social selection to attend screening and adherence to preventive actions initiated are identified.

Aims

The aims are to

1. Estimate benefits of using DANCAVAS screening methodology in men aged 60-64. This evaluation will be overall, and subgroup-analyzed concerning educational level, income level, and psychiatric disease.

Materials and methods 20.000 60-64 year old men are randomized to the control group, while another 5.000 are randomized to the screening and intervention program for CAC, aortic and iliac aneurysms, atrial fibrillation, PAD, hypertension, diabetes and hypercholesterolaemia. There is no exclusion criteria. The screening setup is similar to DANCAVAS:

  1. A small questionnaire on life style, medical history, and the QoL a.o. will be enclosed with the invitation. Non-responders are re-invited once.
  2. The participant will be informed at attendance to the screening visit, and their consent will be obtained together with the questionnaire, weight, height, and waist circumference.
  3. The CT scan will cover the area from the mandibular bone distally to the proximal third of the femur. Calcium scores for the common carotids, coronary arteries, aorta, and common iliac, and femoral arteries will be calculated. The aorta are visualized, and the diameter is measured in ascending, arcus, descending and abdominal, and if possible in the iliac arteries. Further the heart rhythm during the CT scan is evaluated.
  4. Bilateral blood pressure will be recorded three times after 5 minutes of supine rest, and concurrently the ankle blood pressure are measured.
  5. The HbA1c and lipid parameters will be measured. Biobank blood samples are then taken, centrifuged, labelled, cooled, and stored at -80 degrees Celsius.

Follow-up visit after screening

If the CAC is above the median or if an aneurism of peripheral arterial disease are detected the participant is informed of the finding and its implications at a follow-up visit. At this visit, the patient will be recommended suitable prophylactic measures, including smoking cessation, walking/exercise, a low-fat diet. Additionally to start treatment with aspirin 75 mg/day and atorvastatin 40 mg/day. If an aneurism is large the patient is referred vascular surgical assessment for the repair. Otherwise, an annual check-up of the aneurism including a CT scan will be offered.

If no positive findings (CAC above the median, aneurysm or PAD) are detected, the participants will be informed of the findings by e-mail or ordinary post as preferred.

Independent of the above findings, the patients will be encouraged to see their GP for further assessment if potential undiagnosed hypertension (systolic blood pressure >160 mmHg), diabetes mellitus (HbA1c >48 mmol/mol), or significant isolated hypercholesterolemia (total-cholesterol >8.0 mmol/l) are observed, as possible continuous medical treatments will be better managed by the GPs.

The GPs will be informed by a letter of all negative and positive results and the initiated actions.

Enrolment started mid 2017 with sites in Silkeborg, Svendborg, Odense, Vejle and Nykøbing Sjælland.

Power calculations and Randomisations

A study with 4 controls per invited subject is planned based upon the mortality reduction in the VIVA study, a hazard ratio of 0.93 in the screening group is expected. If so, with a 0.05 significance level, and 90% power, we´ll need 5245 experimental subjects and 20980 controls. The randomisation procedure will be stratified by geographical area (municipalities), as sociodemographics, attendance, and disease prevalence are expected to differ across areas. Randomisation will be performed in SPSS by providing each individual a random number from 1-20. Those numbered +16 will be invited to participate in the screening program.

Baseline variables

Age, smoking, previous or current stroke, ischemic heart disease, PAD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, hypertension, use of statins, use of antithrombotics, body mass index, systolic- and diastolic blood pressure, ankle brachial index, marital status, highest educational level, personal- and in house income, psychiatric morbidity defined as any diagnosis and/or use of medications for mental illness, and quality of life (QoL).

Baseline and outcome variables from national registries

The CPR number assigned to Danish citizens enables individual-level linkage to multiple nation-wide healthcare and administrative registries which have proved valid. Registry-based information on outpatient visits, hospitals admissions and procedures (The Danish National Patient Registry), relevant prescribed drugs dispensed (The Danish National Prescription Registry), socio economic status etc. (Registries at Statistics Denmark) and primary care service use (National Health Insurance Service Registry) will be obtained.

Outcomes

The primary outcome is

1. All-cause mortality (time to event or censoring).

Secondary outcomes are:

  1. Positive findings by screening, in all and by specific condition,
  2. Mortality due to CVD (time to death),
  3. Initiation of first redeement of prophylactic pharmaceutical therapy in participants not in therapy at baseline - split on antithrombotic,- lipid lowering and antihypertensive agents,
  4. Initiation of prophylactic surgery and avoidance of acute surgery (time to first procedure concerning AAA, PAD, and coronary revascularization,
  5. Morbidity due to CVD (time to first hospital-based diagnosis and total number of inpatient days) as a composite measure,
  6. Adverse events (time to first hospital-based diagnosis) split on diabetes, intracerebral haemorrhage, and cancer,
  7. Safety (30d postoperative mortality) split on AAA, PAD and coronary revascularization,
  8. QoL,
  9. Health care costs and cost-effectiveness.

Statistical analysis

Baseline characteristics will be analysed using conventional summary statistics. Outcomes representing a time to event are analysed and compared between randomisation groups including subgroups defined by social status and mentally ill using Cox proportional hazards model. All outcomes representing density of events are analysed and compared between randomisation groups including corresponding subgroups using plain incidence rate ratios.

Health economic models

Multivariate regression analysis will be undertaken to analyse health care costs (one year before and after screening) across socioeconomic groups due to pharmacological over-/undertreatment. A cost-effectiveness analysis with 5 years of follow-up adopting a health care perspective will be performed to investigate cost-effectiveness of screening across socioeconomic groups (population heterogeneity). All cause mortality is the primary outcome and costs include screening costs and primary- and secondary care costs. Finally, a health economic decision model based on available evidence (literature review and meta analysis) and original data from the three trials will be developed to inform decision makers about the (distributional) consequences of implementing different variants of population screening in Denmark. The specification of the model will be based on a Markov state model allowing for the analysis of the total number of expected life years and the total health care costs for a lifetime perspective in different scenarios with different variants of screening. The modelling of social inequality (tagging who receives the benefit of screening) is novel in this literature and a unique opportunity given the Danish trials and register data.

Biobank

As in the DANCAVAS study, a biobank will be organised. 40 mL of blood form each of the participants are centrifuged, labelled, and stored at -80 degrees Celsius. The purpose of the biobank is to perform pathophysiological and translational studies, and to facilitate new knowledge of development and treatment of atherosclerosis. Analyses of (1) atherosclerosis and (2) inflammation in the vessel wall, (3) diseases in the myocardium, (4) calcium / phosphate metabolism and (4) proteomics are intended.

Remaining blood samples are planned to be stored for a ten-year period for future research, and subsequently data will be anonymous. This is to be approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency. Prior to future analyses approval by the Region Committee on Biomedical Research Ethics

Study Type  ICMJE Interventional
Study Phase  ICMJE Not Applicable
Study Design  ICMJE Allocation: Randomized
Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
Randomised
Masking: None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose: Screening
Condition  ICMJE
  • Cardiac Disease
  • Vascular Diseases
Intervention  ICMJE Diagnostic Test: Invitation to screening
Invitation to CVD screening with non contrast CT scanning, ABI measurement and blood tests
Study Arms  ICMJE
  • Active Comparator: Screening
    Invitation to cardiovascular screening
    Intervention: Diagnostic Test: Invitation to screening
  • Placebo Comparator: Control
    No invitation to cardiovascular screening
    Intervention: Diagnostic Test: Invitation to screening
Publications * Not Provided

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier (NCT Number) in Medline.
 
Recruitment Information
Recruitment Status  ICMJE Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment  ICMJE
 (submitted: May 9, 2019)
20000
Original Estimated Enrollment  ICMJE Same as current
Estimated Study Completion Date  ICMJE August 1, 2027
Estimated Primary Completion Date August 1, 2020   (Final data collection date for primary outcome measure)
Eligibility Criteria  ICMJE

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Men aged 60-64 living in the municipalities of Funen, Silkeborg, Vejle and surrounding municipailties

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Men not aged 60-64
  • Men not living in the mentioned municipalities
  • Women
Sex/Gender  ICMJE
Sexes Eligible for Study: Male
Ages  ICMJE 60 Years to 64 Years   (Adult)
Accepts Healthy Volunteers  ICMJE No
Contacts  ICMJE
Contact: Jes S Lindholt, PhD +45 24641214 jes.sanddal.lindholt@rsyd.dk
Listed Location Countries  ICMJE Denmark
Removed Location Countries  
 
Administrative Information
NCT Number  ICMJE NCT03946410
Other Study ID Numbers  ICMJE S201600164
Has Data Monitoring Committee No
U.S. FDA-regulated Product
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product: No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product: No
IPD Sharing Statement  ICMJE
Plan to Share IPD: No
Plan Description: Not possible due to data are stored and analysed in the platform of Statistics Denmark
Responsible Party Jes Lindholt, Odense University Hospital
Study Sponsor  ICMJE Odense University Hospital
Collaborators  ICMJE University of Aarhus
Investigators  ICMJE
Principal Investigator: Jes S Lindholt, PhD Odense University Hospital
PRS Account Odense University Hospital
Verification Date May 2019

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP